benefice magazine - ecwst
TRANSCRIPT
BENEFICE MAGAZINE
June 2020
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The Bishop of Repton The Archdeacon of Chesterfield Currently vacant The Venerable Carol Coslett
Tel. 01332 388676
Useful Contacts in the Benefice Rector Currently vacant Lay Reader Lynne Parker, Tel: 01909 530994 Magazine Sue Bradshaw, Tel: 01909 722675 Editor e-mail: [email protected] Churchwardens Creswell Lewis Marriott, Tel 01909 721564 or 07973 823857 Deputy - Dennis Smedley, Tel: 01909 721481
Elmton Bob Glassey, Tel: 01909 720242 or 07502 005108 Deputy – Kevin Jones, Tel: 01909 723241
Whitwell with Steetley Ann Godley, Tel: 01909 723514 Nigel Bradshaw, Tel: 01909 722675
Safeguarding Lead Elmton with Creswell Margaret Froggett, Tel: 01909 723342 Whitwell with Steetley Jackie Stoor, Tel: 07776 149986
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The Valley of Dry Bones has a Future Hope ‘A dem bones, dem bones, dem dry bones. An' I hear the word of the Lord!’ At this time of global pandemic, we live with stark reality of death and life. Ezekiel’s vision of the valley of dry bones (37:1-14) was given when God’s people were in exile in Babylon. They felt dead, being separated from home and God! The vision answers God’s question: ‘can these bones live?’ We can also feel cut off from God, facing the loss of job, business, home or health, with churches unable to meet on Sundays. This vision assures us that God has power over death and can breathe new life into what is hopeless. When Ezekiel is told to ‘prophesy to the bones’, God brings them back to life: the bones come together and are covered with muscles and skin. He then prophesies to the wind, from the four corners of the earth, to bring the bodies alive. The physical bodies are then filled with God’s breath to bring new life. The miracle of this story is that God not only makes these bones live, but also brings the life of His Spirit. The Covid-19 virus robs people of their life by suffocation, so that they can’t breathe. Our hope beyond the pandemic is that the gift of God’s Spirit will bring new life to our lives, churches and world. Life will certainly look very different in the future, but we can be assured that God is with us and that we are safe in His hands. ‘I will put my Spirit in you, and you will live, and I will settle you in your own land. Then you will know that I the Lord have spoken, and I have done it, declares the Lord.’(vs14) Rev Paul Hardingham Parish Pump
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Lockdown, you and IT How are you getting on with technology? The coronavirus pandemic has driven hundreds of millions of us to use it more than ever, as we sit at home in frustrated isolation. If you are used to digital meetings and Zoom, it is not a problem, but for millions of grandparents wanting to see their families, or non-techie people wanting to see their friends, it has been quite a learning curve. So, is there a patron saint of computers and electronics and all the difficult stuff? Some people say the patron saint of the internet should be Saint Isidore of Seville, a Bishop and scholar in the Seventh Century who wrote a book called Etymologies or The Origins, in which he tried to record everything that was known. That seems to be a good basis for sainthood, or at least for the internet. Another candidate is Saint Eligius who lived about the same time. He is quite busy already as the patron saint of goldsmiths, metalworkers, vets, the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers (REME), horses and those who work with them. His main qualification seems to have been his ability to make things. My suggestion is Zebedee. No, not the character from The Magic Roundabout, but the father of James and John. After all, consider this: “James the son of Zebedee, and his brother John…were in a boat with Zebedee their father, mending their nets, and He called them. (Matt. 4:21) OK, it is not the internet, but Zebedee knew about mending a net which would have had both good and bad stuff all over it. Certainly, whenever I get in an IT muddle during this lockdown, I would welcome any patron saint that was willing to help me! David Pickup Parish Pump
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Prayers Give us strength Lord Jesus Christ, you taught us to love our neighbour and to care for those in need as if we were caring for you. In this time of anxiety, give us strength to comfort the fearful, to tend the sick and to assure the isolated of our love, and your love, for your name’s sake. Amen. We are your people For the Christian community, we are not people of fear; we are people of courage. We are not people who protect our own safety; we are people who protect our neighbours’ safety. We are not people of greed; we are people of generosity. We are your people God, giving and loving, wherever we are, whatever it costs, for as long as it takes wherever you call us. Amen Planted in the love of the Father Planted in the love of the Father You can grow, dear one, You can grow. Watered by the spring of the Spirit His fruit you’ll show, His fruit you’ll show. And when the sun scorches, And the thorns threaten, And the storms around life’s garden blow - Your roots will hold, And hold secure, Because you’re planted in the love of the Father.
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Article Submission deadlines Articles for this magazine are always welcome. If you have anything that you wish to contribute please submit them to the editor by e-mail to [email protected] by the dates listed below:
Month of magazine Submission deadline
July 2020 21st June 2020
August 2020 19th July 2020
September 2020 23rd August 2020
October 2020 20th September 2020
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Crossword (answers on page 18) Crossword Clues Across 1 See 23 Across 3 Where the thief on the cross was told he would be, with Jesus (Luke 23:43) (8) 8 Invalid (4) 9 Blasphemed (Ezekiel 36:20) (8) 11 Adhering to the letter of the law rather than its spirit (Philippians 3:6) (10) 14 Shut (Ecclesiastes 12:4) (6) 15 ‘This is how it will be with anyone who — up things for himself but is not rich towards God’ (Luke 12:21) (6)
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17 Mary on Isis (anag.) (10) 20 Agreement (Hebrews 9:15) (8) 21 Native of, say, Bangkok (4) 22 Deaf fort (anag.) (5-3) 23 and 1 Across ‘The Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of — to work it and take — of it’ (Genesis 2:15) (4,4) Down 1 Struggle between opposing forces (Habakkuk 1:3) (8) 2 James defined this as ‘looking after orphans and widows in their distress and keeping oneself from being polluted by the world’ (James 1:27) (8) 4 ‘The one I kiss is the man; — him’ (Matthew 26:48) (6) 5 ‘Be joyful in hope, patient in — , faithful in prayer’ (Romans 12:12) (10) 6 St Columba’s burial place (4) 7 Swirling current of water (4) 10 Loyalty (Isaiah 19:18) (10) 12 ‘God was pleased through the foolishness of what was — , to save those who believe’ (1 Corinthians 1:21) (8) 13 Camp where the angel of the Lord slew 185,000 men one night (2 Kings 19:35) (8) 16 ‘There is still — — — Jonathan; he is crippled in both feet’ (2 Samuel 9:3) (1,3,2) 18 David Livingstone was one (4) 19 Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority (1,1,1,1)
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The Rectors of Whitwell (Part 5) On the face of it, John Newark (in part 4) remained Rector for 30 years, which may well be so, although it is far from certain. His time in Whitwell links the Hundred Years War with France to the Civil War in England, called the Wars of the Roses (1455- c.1485). What we know from the bishop’s register is that Henry Redych became Rector in 1462. If surnames reveal a family’s origins then Redych was a Worcestershire man and of the town of Redditch. The patron on this occasion was a Sir Nicholas Longford, although the appointment was disputed by a leading local family, the De Ryes. Bishop John Hales of Lichfield ordered the Archdeacon of Derby to resolve the issue and the latter’s court found for the De Ryes, so Redych left after a year. These were difficult times. While memories of the losses in France were receding into the past, there was uneasiness at home with the appearance of the Lollards, who were, in a way, early Protestants and although comparatively few in number, were a cause of unrest, especially in the towns. The government found the movement difficult to deal with, except by repression. As they originated with John Wycliffe in Leicestershire, they were not unknown in Derbyshire. A greater problem was the Wars of the Roses, although neither side really used a rose as a badge. The source of this conflict was the insanity of Henry VI of Lancaster (red rose) who suffered from melancholia, leaving him incapable of governing or, worst still, permitting him to interfere at the wrong time, so that his cousin of York (white rose) disputed Henry’s right to the crown and victory in battle put Edward IV on the throne (1461). With the end of feudal restrictions, the more adventurous Whitwell lads probably joined up. Neither was there tranquillity in Whitwell, for when Ralph de Rye of Whitwell appointed John Harrison as Rector in 1464, his right was challenged by a rival claimant, although unsuccessfully and Harrison stayed about 5 years.
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In 1469, Ralph de Rye presented Thomas Pierrepoint to the living. A member of a famous family, he was Rector from 1469 to about 1486, over 16 years. It was a dangerous time when the crown changed hands again to Henry, back to the Yorkists and culminating in the Lancastrian victory at Bosworth, not that far from Whitwell, in 1485. Bosworth Field placed Henry VII (Tudor) on the throne. He married Elizabeth of York, so uniting the houses and ending the civil war. The next Rector was John Mafield or Mayfield DD (Doctor of Divinity). He studied Canon (Church) law at Oxford and Divinity at Cambridge. With such qualifications he might have been in diocesan administration, but there is no record of him in any cathedral chapter. Owing to the patronage disputes, he was chosen and instituted to the Whitwell living by Bishop Hales, who must have been tired of all the ‘in fighting’ since the ceremony took place in Ashbourne Church on 4th May 1486, perhaps because some bitterness still lingered in Whitwell and district. Patronage disputes often occurred because a manor was rarely owned outright by one person and in the case of a number of owners, each could claim the right to present. The Rye family also had property in Eckington; some lived there, others in Whitwell. Mayfield’s family probably came from Mayfield in Derbyshire, although there is a Mayfield in Sussex, but that is less likely. It is not known how long Mayfield remained in the parish as due to the bombardment of Lichfield Cathedral in the Civil War, the records for this period are patchy. It was still a good living worth in the Valor Ecclesiasticus (Value of the Church) of 1535 £23-8s (40p), mainly in tithes, so he may have stayed in the parish many years, perhaps into the reign of Henry VIII and near the Reformation. Just as the Tudors brought peace to the nation, he may have pacified the rival patrons in this parish. Norman Trott
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Local History Corner Arrival of Evacuees from Lowestoft 80 years ago, Sunday 2nd June 1940, was a day parents and children living in Lowestoft, Suffolk, would long remember. Those living today in Lowestoft and who are over 80 years old still do. It was the day children and teachers from schools in Lowestoft were evacuated to Derbyshire, several schools to Creswell, Whitwell, Clowne and Barlborough. The journey began at Lowestoft station. Children, with a name label pinned on, lined up with other class pupils, clutching a small case or paper carrier containing the few essentials they had been told to bring, change of clothes, nightwear, toothbrush etc. and not forgetting their gas mask in its cardboard box which they carried over their shoulder. It was a hot June day. Parents were not allowed inside the station and they had to stand behind the iron railings to see their children go into the unknown. Their anguish must have been palpable but many children looked upon the journey with excitement, thinking they would be back in a week or two. Sadly for some it would be 5 years before they were reunited with their parents. It was to be a long, hot, tiring journey to our area. The children evacuated to Creswell were taken to the Regors cinema for refreshments before being taken to various homes. Some people willing to take them in, others not quite so accommodating. Although many had good homes and some stayed for 5 years with their foster parents, others weren’t quite so fortunate. No-one realised the trauma these children were experiencing and no help was given, either to them or to the receiving families, to cope with their sometimes unsettling behaviour. Soon after they came, there was a very big air raid on Sheffield. Shelters had been built earlier and it was now that people ran to them for cover for probably the first time. A bomb fell near Whitwell but throughout the war Lowestoft was attacked relentlessly and,
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by 1945, the town had been decimated. At least children were relatively safe here in Derbyshire. Creswell children shared their schools with the evacuees. One week lessons took place there in the morning, next week in the afternoon. When not in school, the teachers took their classes on nature walks, played games outside and later picked rose hips for syrup and blackberries for jam, all to help the war effort. Time off from school in the autumn for older children to go potato picking. Heavy snow in winter delighted the children, always plenty of coal for big fires to get warm and dry. Double summertime helped, much longer to be outdoors to play hop scotch, tincan a lurkey, rallico etc. The Regors cinema had Saturday morning matinees. Children loved Shirley Temple and Roy Rogers with Trigger, his horse. In 1945, and with the war over, most children went back to Lowestoft but some stayed to work and then marry and settle down here. Miss Hogg, one of the teachers who came in 1940, stayed and became Deputy Head of Creswell Infants School. Over the years the evacuees have returned to visit their wartime homes and families. Now 80 years since they first came, the Evacuation Reunion Group in Lowestoft are producing the last book of their experiences. They had a big commemoration gathering planned for this June. Sadly this will not now take place but along with local ‘children’, now in their 80s, they will be remembering their wartime experiences together. The Evacuees Song, printed in The Worksop Guardian in 1990. We come from Lowestoft by the sea where the weather’s always fine, It never rains, it’s never cold and the sun will always shine. You never work, you play all day or lie upon the sand, And go to sleep or wriggle your toes and listen to the band.
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Chorus We’ve come to Worksop, Worksop tra, la, la, All stuck in Worksop, tra, la, la, la, la. They mash the tea and wash the pots when we come home from school, They say we’re mardy when we cry and mucky as a rule! In 1990 Mr HL Baker added another verse: Of course there’s nowhere a town like ours, it’s nearly off the map, But we’re safe and sound in Worksop, so we don’t care a rap. They took us in, they put us to bed, they fed us our rations and more, They mothered us, it felt like home. We’ve all this to thank them for. Enid Hibbert
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For the young (and young at heart)
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Terms of the Greatest Commandment - Part 4: ‘Mind’ ‘I think, therefore I am, a Christian!’ (Dai Franks, after Rene Descartes) Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength, if you have a mind to! Is to use the sort of play on words that writers are often inclined to. In the same vein, to conclude this, ‘Greatest Commandment Terms’ quadrilogy, Comes a ‘novel’ comparison of a ‘tale of two trinities’. Most Holy Trinity, by Your grace, bless us with all the gifts of the Holy Spirit, with knowledge to enable us to ‘think’ about the mysteries of our faith which are beyond understanding. Amen.
‘As the images unwind, like the circles that you find, In the windmills of your mind.’ (Michel Legrand) A standard study process is to ‘analyse’, Breaking down concepts into chunks, ‘bite size’, And understanding can become more of a ‘doddle’ If, from the elements of the concept, you can make a model. Furthermore, by use of analogy, Here, imagine the ‘mind’, in the form of a tree. For its branches, as faculties, it has three; The ‘Thinking’, the ‘Feeling’ and the ‘Doing’ trinity. The leaves on the branches represent all the facets, A profusion of each faculty’s talents and assets With our ‘Terms of the Commandment’, we see them start linking, Such as the ‘soul’, in regard to ‘highest order thinking’! Our minds reel in awe at Your might and mystery, for Your ways are not our ways, and your thoughts are not our thoughts, so may we be restless in mind, heart, soul and strength until we come to truly know You more fully. Amen.
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“Holy, holy, holy! Merciful and mighty, God in three persons, blessed Trinity!” (Reginald Heber) The ‘Mind’ having been covered, in the other of our two trinities, The ‘Holy’ one offers its own three Faculties; The Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit Each have their, salvation fuelled, facets to elicit! Eternal God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, reach out to those who already know You and to those who need and long to know You, that all may be granted a greater sense of who You are and what
You are. Amen. Some facets have been compiled in the following manner: (There are many more for each of them) Father; originator, source, sender and planner. Son; wise director, the means, sent one and achiever. Spirit; advocate, effector, convincer and converter. And a voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased”. (Matthew 3:17) To tie together the mind trinity’s domains and roles we see, There has to be an ‘Owner’, an ‘I’, a ‘Self’, a ‘Me’. And in the Trinity of the Spirit, the Father and the Son, There is an, “I am who I am”, to Whom They all belong! The tale of two trinities may have been a ‘Dickens’ of an idea, But this study, albeit ‘novel’, comes to a conclusion here. Maybe, “It is a far, far better thing ...than I have ever done.” Or, might it have been far better for me, to have just left it alone? Amazing Three-in-one God, as You are one with each other, draw us to be as one with You, bound together in love, And so it is with reverence and adoration that we worship and glorify You, God
beyond, beside and around us. Amen. By Vaughan Clements and Lynne Parker
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Events from the past from the month of June 1st Lester Piggott rides Teenoso to victory in Epsom Derby 1983
2nd Mrs Butterwick wins The Oaks for the 6th Duke Portland 1883
3rd Jackie Stewart wins Monaco Grand Prix for Tyrell Ford 1973
4th Profumo resigns from Government over Christine Keeler affair 1963
6th Renovated Nottingham Theatre Royal opened by Princess Anne 1978
7th Movie Ghostbusters released 1984
11th WW2 RAF and Royal Navy begin defence of Malta (Siege of Malta) 1940
12th Holiday camp founder Billy Butlin dies (80) 1980
14th Women's tennis player Steffi Graff (German) born 1969
16th Sheffield Park hill flats opened by Hugh Gaitskell, labour leader, 1961
17th Cruise missiles to be deployed at RAF Greenham Common 1980
18th First US female in space, Sally Ride on board Challenger 1983
20th Victoria and Albert museum opened by Queen Victoria 1857
21st Princess Diana gives birth to Prince William 1982
22nd Tory MP, John Bercow, elected speaker in House of Commons 2009
23rd UK votes to leave the EU in a referendum 2016
25th Strangeways Prison, Manchester, opened 1868
26th BBC police drama Line of Duty aired for the first time 2012
29th Total solar eclipse in the UK lasting 24 seconds 1927
30th ELO classic album Discovery at no1 in album charts 1979
Submitted by Kevin Jones
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Crossword solution ACROSS: 1, Care. 3, Paradise. 8, Null. 9, Profaned. 11, Legalistic. 14, Closed. 15, Stores. 17, Missionary. 20, Covenant. 21, Thai. 22, Trade-off. 23, Eden DOWN: 1, Conflict. 2, Religion. 4, Arrest. 5, Affliction. 6, Iona. 7, Eddy. 10, Allegiance. 12, Preached. 13, Assyrian. 16, A son of. 18, Scot. 19, DVLA
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FROM THE MEMORIAL BOOKS - Creswell
01/06/2007 Linda Margaret Hunt
04/06/2006 George Holmes
06/06 Julian Lindsay White
09/06/2014 Christine Richardson
10/06/2006 Ralph Richards
11/06/2005 Rita June Walker
12/06/2005 Dick Heald
17/06/2007 Eunice May Whitehead
20/06/1982 Bernard Marsh
20/06/2011 Joyce Greaves
21/06/2013 Albert Gibson
24/06/2005 Phyllis Margery Wood
27/06/1989 Craig Phillip Cheetham
29/06/1992 Joanna Sue Burt
FROM THE MEMORIAL BOOKS - Whitwell
01/06/1987 Eric Radford 12/05/1917
01/06/1991 Jean June Bishop 28/07/1926
01/06/2002 Joyce Parker 04/08/1921
02/06/1993 Orlando Quibell 11/02/1924
02/06/2017 Winifred Mary Swain 24/09/1916
03/06/2004 Kathleen Ellen Crosby Wilson 17/01/1953
03/06/2013 Joseph Patterson 27/07/1926
04/06/1984 Elsie May Setchell 30/05/1896
04/06/1989 Gordon Elliott Young 24/07/1936
04/06/1991 Millicent M Leese 28/08/1907
04/06/1997 Mytyl Mary Littlewood 21/11/1942
04/06/2000 Elsie Turner 09/02/1909
04/06/2015 Raymond Rex Roberts 09/08/1932
04/06/2016 Zoe Wilson Hague 30/11/1921
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05/06/1978 William Alban Cooke 21/07/1922
07/06/1958 William Hebdon Rogers
07/06/1983 Amy Eliza Barrow 19/05/1896
08/06/1987 Honor White Johnson 10/01/1913
08/06/1990 Salathiel O (Joe) Kirkley 22/12/1919
09/06/1979 Winifred Holmes 19/01/1910
09/06/1992 Arthur Clayton 08/12/1902
10/06/2015 Maria Ann Hibbard 02/01/1947
11/06/1981 Frederick C Buckingham 05/10/1902
11/06/1986 John Thomas William Johnson 14/04/1910
11/06/2002 John Oliver Turner 12/10/1920
11/06/2005 Nancy Maxine Hunt 03/07/1905
12/06/1982 Sheila Hind (Nee Pedley) 14/07/1930
12/06/2010 Ernest Ordidge 21/10/1935
14/06/1982 Walter Owens 24/11/1904
14/06/2001 Douglas Lacey 12/01/1934
14/06/2005 Elaine Handel 05/04/1951
15/06/1990 Lily Ellis 15/08/1897
15/06/1994 Barbara Marshall 17/02/1904
16/06/1981 Alice May Williams 24/05/1902
17/06/1983 Harold Bennett 19/04/1912
18/06/2002 Lilian Checkley 27/10/1930
19/06/1986 Joyce Margaret Wordley 16/12/1923
19/06/1988 Dorothy May Cassidy (Nee Presley) 27/05/1917
19/06/1990 Thomas Mann 17/11/1916
19/06/2003 Fay Ann Potts 28/06/1933
21/06/1944 Ernest Henry Vardy 06/07/1886
21/06/1980 Elsie Kirk 24/07/1902
21/06/1994 Anthony Milne Coates 09/01/1930
22/06/1988 Evelyn Emma Caple 01/02/1910
22/06/1992 Scott Anthony Richardson 05/04/1992
24/06/1996 John Pearson 23/04/1944
25/06/1990 Margaret B Woodhead 10/08/1903
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25/06/2003 Sylvia Oliphant Johnson 18/05/1910
25/06/2013 Irene Mellor-Hill 31/03/1918
25/06/2017 Yvonne Ann Devereaux 11/10/1935
26/06/2000 Alan Marsden 06/05/1928
27/06/1998 Harold Wood 01/09/1912
29/06/1971 Audrey Janine London 25/03/1967